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The Longest Ride(113)





“Just tired, is all. It’s been a long couple of days.”



“I know. But you won, huh?”



“Yeah,” he said. “I won.”



“That’s good. For the ranch, I mean.” Sophia wrinkled her forehead.



“Yeah,” he repeated, sounding almost numb. “It’s good for the ranch.”





24





Sophia





L

uke was off again. Not like last weekend, but something definitely wasn’t right with him. And it wasn’t just exhaustion, either. He was pale, his skin tone almost white, and though he’d denied it, she knew that he was in a lot more pain than usual. Sometimes, when he’d made a quick, unexpected movement, she’d noticed he’d wince or draw a sharp breath.



Dinner with his mom had been a stilted affair. Though Linda was happy to see her, Luke had stayed outside by the grill while she and Linda chatted the whole time, almost as if he were trying to avoid them. At the table, the conversation had been notable for all the subjects they studiously avoided. Luke didn’t talk about his obvious pain, his mom asked nothing about the rodeo, and Sophia refused to mention Marcia or Brian or how awful the week had been at the house. And it had been awful, one of the worst weeks ever.



As soon as they returned to Luke’s, he made straight for the bedroom. She heard him tap out some pills from one bottle, then another, then followed him as he walked to the kitchen, where he swallowed what she guessed was a handful of pills with a glass of water.



To her alarm, he leaned forward, resting both hands on the edge of the counter, his head hung low.



“How bad is it?” she whispered, her hands on his back. “Your headache, I mean?”



He drew a couple of long breaths before answering. “I’m okay,” he said.



“Obviously, you’re not,” she said. “How much did you take?”



“A couple of each,” he admitted.



“But I saw you take some before dinner —”



“It wasn’t enough, obviously.”



“If it’s that bad, you should have gone to the doctor.”



“There’s no reason,” he said in a dull voice. “I already know what’s wrong.”



“What’s wrong?”



“I have a concussion.”



She blinked. “How? Did you hit your head when you jumped off the bull?”



“No,” he said. “I landed wrong in practice a couple of weeks ago.”



“A couple of weeks ago?”



“Yeah,” he admitted. “And I made the mistake of practicing again too soon.”



“You mean your head’s been hurting for two weeks?” Sophia tried to keep the rising panic out of her voice.



“Not like this. Riding yesterday aggravated it again.”



“Why would you ride, then, if you have what sounds like a concussion?”



He kept his focus on the floor. “I didn’t have a choice.”



“Of course you had a choice. And that was a stupid thing to do. C’mon. Let’s bring you to the emergency room —”



“No,” he said.



“Why not?” she said, bewildered. “I’ll drive. You need to see a doctor.”



“I’ve had headaches like this before and I know what a doctor’s going to tell me. He’s going to tell me to take some time off, and I can’t do that.”



“You mean you’re going to ride again next weekend?”



“I have to.”



Sophia tried and failed to understand what he was saying. “Is that why your mom has been so mad at you? Because you’re acting like an idiot?”



He didn’t answer right away. Instead, he sighed. “She doesn’t even know about it.”



“You didn’t tell her? Why wouldn’t you tell her?”



“Because I don’t want her to know. She’d just end up worrying.”



She shook her head. “I just don’t understand why you would continue to ride, when you know it’s going to make your concussion worse. It’s dangerous.”



“I’m past worrying about it,” he said.



“What do you mean by that?”



Luke slowly pushed himself upright and turned to face her with an expression of resignation, something akin to an apology.



“Because,” he finally said, “even before the concussion, I was never supposed to ride again.”



She wasn’t sure she’d heard him right, and she blinked. “You’re not supposed to ride at all? Ever?”



“According to the doctors, I’m taking a massive risk every single time.”